According to some accounts Henry Morgan was born around 1635 at
Llanrumney
(in Welsh, Llanrhymny). In those days, Llanrumney was a manor in
the ancient Hundred of Newport in Monmouthshire but nowadays is thought
of as a suburb of Cardiff.. The manor had been the property of the ancient
family of Kemeys but an heiress married Henry Morgan of Machen in the 16th
century and the Morgans were here for six generations. Towards
the end of his life Henry Morgan is said to have bought an estate in Jamaica
and named it Penkarne. The manor of Pencarn (again in the Hundred of Newport)
was itself associated with the Morgans for many centuries. An ancestor
Owen, son of the Lord of Caerleon, lived there in the 12th century. Sir
Thomas Morgan of Pencarn became known as "the warrior" after commanding
English forces overseas in the 1580s and 1590s. His nephew, Sir Matthew
Morgan was wounded at the siege of Rouen in 1591. Matthew's brother, Sir
Charles also served overseas with distinction and became a member of the
privy council of King Charles I.

A brief note of his career(revised March 2000)

Of the generally available literature on Henry
Morgan, I have found Dudley Pope's "Harry Morgan's Way" (Secker and Warburg,
London 1977) to be the most satisfactory and I have followed this in describing
Morgan's exploits. Dudley Pope consulted British and Spanish archives and
brought his wide knowledge of maritime history to the topic. It is worth
remembering that Morgan's raids were carried out in his capacity as a "privateer".
Like commanders in many colonial outposts of the time, he was authorised
to act as an agent of his country at a time when official government forces
were often not available so far from home. His reports to the governor
of Jamaica and papers between Jamaica and London survive. His own official
reports of his exploits are usually laconic in the extreme and seem to
reveal a naturally modest man, not comfortable with the sometimes rather
flowery prose of his day. As he once wrote, "I ... have been more used
to the pike than the book ...".

There is little doubt that the detailed descriptions
of his famous raids on Spanish colonial outposts are based on the writings of
a Dutch (or possibly French) man known as Esquemeling who took part in some of these raids and
published his account as De Americaensche Zee-Rovers. This was translated
for the Spanish market and entitled Piratas de la America y Luz ...
. An English translation followed and this was called Bucaniers (sic)
of America ... Wherein are contained ... the Unparallel'd Exploits of Sir
Henry Morgan, our English (sic) Jamaican Hero. Who sacked Puerto
Velo, burnt Panama etc ... . This (and another English translation)
incorporated material which Esquemeling seems to have included with an
eye to his Dutch and Spanish readers many of whom would have been antagonistic
towards Morgan . When the English translations were brought to Morgan's
attention he promptly
sued the publishers, who eventually settled out of court. Each paid him
200 pounds in damages and issued new editions with apologetic prefaces.
The original books had accused Morgan of permitting atrocities while raiding
Spanish colonial outposts but he seems to have
been most upset by passages which stated that he had arrived in the West
Indies as an indentured servant, like so many of the early settlers. The
new prefaces pointed out that Morgan "was a gentleman's son of good quality
in the county of Monmouth, and never was a servant to anybody in his life,
unless unto his Majesty ..." . It is well known that Welsh people were
particularly proud of their pedigrees and in this respect Morgan was true
to type.

Henry Morgan was born around 1635.
He arrived at the West Indian island of Barbados in 1655 as a junior officer
in an expedition sent out by Oliver Cromwell and commanded by General Venables
(the naval commander was Vice-Admiral Penn, whose eldest son gave his name
to the American state). This was the time of the Commonwealth. King Charles
I had been executed and Cromwell's head appeared on the coinage. After the restoration
of the monarchy in 1660, Henry's uncle Edward was sent out to Jamaica as lieutenant governor.
The Venables expedition had by now captured the island of Jamaica with
its large natural harbour and strategic position. Henry, already famous
in Jamaica, courted and married his uncle's oldest surviving daughter
Mary Elizabeth, and her sisters wed two of his trusted friends.
Henry remained faithful to his wife until his death in 1688, but they were
not blessed with children.

Henry
learned much from Commodore Christopher Mings when he sailed as part of
the flotilla which first attacked and plundered Santiago (Cuba) and in
1663 when he commanded a vessel in the attack on the Mexican coast. In
this, 1100 men described as privateersmen, buccaneers and volunteers sailed
more than 1000 miles to attack Campeche. The town, defended by two forts
and regular Spanish troops, fell after a day of fighting and the buccaneers
took fourteen Spanish ships from the port as prizes.

Why did the English authorities seem to encourage
the activities of the buccaneers? The answer lies in the fact that people
in power in London knew that Britain's future prosperity rested on her
ability to expand trading markets. The Spanish had claimed the New World
and Spain had become dependant upon the gold and silver it produced. They
sought to control trade and limit it to Spanish ships. At the time in question,
it was not unknown for the Spaniards to capture British ships in the West
Indies and to enslave their crews. The Spanish Armada had sailed to attack
England only seventy or so years ago and the perceived threat from Spanish
catholicism was probably greater than the more recent worry about eastern
European communism. England had no colonies where slaves toiled in gold
mines and knew that only the outposts of the enfeebled Spanish empire prevented
British merchants from exploiting new opportunities for trade.

Why were buccaneers so called? The original boucaniers
were the native inhabitants of the West Indies who had developed a method
of preserving meat by roasting it on a barbecue and curing it with smoke.
Their fire pit and grating were called a boucan and the finished
strips of meat were also known as boucan. In time, the motley collection
of international refugees, escaped slaves, transported criminals and indentured
servants who roamed along the coasts if the islands became known as buccaneers
and the term came to describe an unscrupulous adventurer of the area.

In 1663, Henry Morgan was one of five captains
who left the old Port Royal in Jamaica and set a course for New Spain.
They were not to return for about 18 months. Although his fellow captains
were experienced privateers, it seems likely that Morgan became leader
of the expedition because of his background as a soldier. It might be as
well to remind readers that the renowned exploits of the buccaneers took
place on land. In most cases, ships were simply used to carry them to a
safe landing from which they could march to attack a fortified town. Battles
on the high seas were not liable to be so rewarding so these were generally
not sought. It is also worth pointing out that whereas Morgan seemed to
lead a charmed life in the face of danger on land, at sea he was rather
unlucky. One ship exploded beneath him when his crew, the worse for drink,
lit candles near the gunpowder stores and on another occasion his ship
struck a reef near shore and he had to be rescued from a rock.

On the expedition mentioned above, the small fleet
sailed from Jamaica and rounded the Yucatan peninsula to the Gulf of Mexico.
They landed at Frontera and marched 50 miles inland to attack Villahermosa.
After sacking this town they found that their own ships had been captured
by the Spanish so they had to themselves capture two Spanish ships and
four coastal canoes in which to continue their epic voyage. They sailed
and paddled 500 miles against an adverse current to return around the Yucatan
peninsular and continued along the coast of Central America. They landed
on the coast of modern Nicaragua and again struck inland to attack a rich
town called Granada. This was taken in a surprise raid and the official
report said that more than a thousand of the Indians "joined the privateers
in plundering and would have killed the (Spanish) prisoners, especially
the churchmen ...".

Morgan and his men returned to Jamaica with great
riches. As Dudley Pope points out, by 1665 Morgan had taken the lead in
the most audacious buccaneering expedition ever known in the West Indies.
He could have settled to the comfortable life of a planter and this might
have been expected after his marriage to Mary Morgan but it was felt that
Jamaica was threatened and it seems Morgan was asked to organise the island's
militia and defences. This task completed, in 1668 he gathered a fleet
of a dozen privateers at a rendezvous in the tiny islands south of Cuba
known as the South Cays. 700 hundred men crewed vessels we would regard
as very small in these days. The largest was perhaps the Dolphin, a Spanish
prize. She was of fifty tons, carried 8 guns and was perhaps 50 feet along
the deck. Some of the vessels were merely large open boats with some shelter
for the crews and provisions. They would have a single mast and could be
rowed when necessary.

It was decided to attack the town of El Puerto
del Principe, which despite its name was 45 miles inland from the Cuban
coast. In Morgan's words "we marched 20 leagues to Porto Principe and with
little resistance possessed ourselves of the same. ... On the Spaniard's
entreaty we forebore to fire the town, or bring away prisoners, but on
delivery of 1,000 beeves, released them all." This raid did not provide
much plunder and on their return to the coast most of the French captains
decided to join up with their countryman, the bloodthirsty privateer L'Ollonais,
at Tortuga. Thus, in May of 1668 Morgan sailed with his remaining
force south, across the Caribbean to a place near the present day Panama
Canal, called a council of war and announced his intention to attack the
heavily defended harbour of Portobelo. He was soon to write "we took our
canoes, twenty-three in number and rowing along the coast, landed at three
o'clock in the morning and made our way into the town, and seeing that
we could not refresh ourselves in quiet we were enforced to assault the
castle ..." When they had captured the fort of San Geronimo they made their
way to the dungeon and there found eleven English prisoners covered with
sores caused by the chafing of their heavy chains. The story of the plundering
and further attack on a fort in the centre of Portobelo is too long to
be told here but it made Morgan's name as a daring and successful leader.
So much coin was plundered that Spanish pieces of eight became additional
legal currency in Jamaica.

Later in 1668, Morgan sailed with ten vessels to
Cow Island off the coast of Hispaniola (modern Haiti). Here the Oxford,
a warship sent out for the defence of Jamaica by the British government,
found the French privateer ship Le Cerf Volant. The British master
of a ship from Virginia had accused the French vessel of piracy so the
Cerf Volant was arrested and condemned as a prize by the Jamaica
Court of Admiralty. After the Oxford was blown up (in an explosion
said to have killed 250 people) while Morgan dined in the great cabin,
the Cerf Volant ultimately became his flagship, under the new name
of Satisfaction. After cruising east along the coast of Hispaniola
and attacking coastal towns along the way, Morgan turned south to sail
across the Caribbean again, making for Maracaibo in the Gulf of Venezuela.
This he took, together with the more southerly town of Gibraltar. On their
return journey, the privateers were bottled up at the lake of Maracaibo
by several large Spanish warships and and a reinforced fort. Morgan had
to use great ingenuity to escape. While doing so added to his treasure
yet again.

In 1670 Morgan assembled an expedition of 36 ships
and over 1800 men at a safe anchorage off Hispaniola. At a meeting with
his captains, English and French, it was decided to attack Panama, the
legendary Spanish city of the Indies. All the riches of the mines of Peru
passed through here on the way to Spain and the city was known to be full
of rich merchants and fine buildings. The task confronting Morgan was extremely
difficult and dangerous. There was no Panama Canal and his force would
have to take the Caribbean island of Old Providence, sail from there to
land at Chagres and cross the isthmus to Panama through thick jungle and
across high mountains. Even England's hero Sir Francis Drake had failed
in a similar undertaking many decades before. After many battles and privations,
in 1671
Panama finally fell. The city burned after some houses were fired (supposedly by the
defenders) and after the buccaneers left, the ruins were overgrown with vegetation.
Ultimately a new city was built miles away at Perico. (If you are interested
in a more informed account of Morgan's activities in Panama, Sean P. Kelley
knows the country and describes Morgan's exploits there within his resource
on Colonial
Panama.)

Morgan returned to Jamaica minus his ship the Satisfaction
which had been wrecked on a reef but his fleet docked at Port Royal with
hundreds of slaves and chests of gold, silver and jewels. Under the strict
agreement that governed the division of the spoils in those days, Dudley
Pope estimates that Morgan would have made 1000 British pounds (around
1600 USD) from the Panama expedition and it is known that ordinary seamen
pocketed 200 pieces of eight (worth 50 pounds or 80 dollars). In those
days, 50 pounds would have been considered "a small fortune".

By the time that the sack of Panama was known in
London, politics had taken a turn. There were those who sought to conciliate
Spain, especially since reports from some European capitals suggested that
she was near to declaring war on England. It was thought prudent to arrest
Modyford, the governor of Jamaica and later to arrest Morgan. In 1672 Morgan
sailed for London in the Welcome, a leaky naval frigate. He arrived in
a country which differed greatly to the one he had left seventeen years
before. Then it had been Puritan, now the monarchy had been restored and
London was once more a city of theatre, fashion, corruption and fascinating
figures. Some of Christopher Wren's new classically inspired churches already
adorned the city and the diarist Samuel Pepys became secretary to the Board
of Admiralty in 1673. There is no record of Morgan having been detained
and he seems to have spent three years in London at his own expense but
free to meet the people he chose. He became friendly with the second duke
of Albermarle (Morgan's uncle had fought with the duke's father in the
Civil Wars) and it seems that this friendship brought Morgan to the
notice of King Charles II. In time, England's attitude to Spain changed
and when the King became aware that the English colony of Jamaica was under
threat again, he asked Morgan for advice about the defence of the island,
knighted him and wondered if he might like to return there as Lieutenant
Governor.

At the age of 45, Sir Henry was acting governor of Jamaica, Vice-Admiral,
Commandant of the Port Royal Regiment, Judge of the Admiralty Court and
Justice of the Peace. Dudley Pope sketches a picture of a tall and generally
lean man but one who now exhibited a paunch. He was known to drink heavily
and to be fond of the company of his old comrades in the rum shops of Port
Royal. He seems to have worked to transform the island's fortifications
and he survived various political upheavals while expanding his estate.
In 1687 the duke of Albermarle arrived in Jamaica to take up his post as
the new governor. Christopher Monck's private yacht was of a type never
seen in those waters and the merchant ships which accompanied it carried
500 tons of his possessions and stores as well as around a hundred servants.
His wife, Lady Elizabeth Cavendish, formerly the toast of London society
had, by the age of 27, become mentally unstable and to attend on her the
duke had brought out young Dr. Hans Sloane. Sloane's name was to become
famous in many fields but for those with an interest in the history of
the buccaneers he is always remembered for his notes on the last days of
Sir Henry Morgan. Sloane attempted to treat Morgan, finding him yellow
of complexion and swollen, but it seems that Morgan's frame did not respond.
At one time Sloane describes Morgan as having sought the advice of a black
doctor who plastered him all over with clay and water but even this treatment
failed and he signed his will in June of 1688. On the 25th of August he
died.

For many, Henry Morgan is little more than the name of a romantic "pirate" of yore, but I now see signs of Morgan being re-evaluated as one
of Britain's most successful military strategists and as a man with the
leadership qualities of an Alexander. He gained the loyalty of the buccaneers,
who followed him without question, and the respect of kings and princes.
Of all the great figures in Welsh history he must be counted among the
most attractive and able.

However ...

I must be admitted that there is a case for a different
viewpoint. A Spanish reader of this page has drawn attention to the
atrocities carried out by Morgan's men on many of his raids. (These
typically involved the torture of residents of the towns attacked in order
to make them divulge the location of hidden valuables.) He
sees Morgan as "a man who used clergy as human shields, tortured
civilians, organized gigantic looting expeditions in in the full knowledge
that no state of war existed between the parties, and did not hesitate to
put whole populations to the sword". There is little doubt that by today's
standards Morgan could be accused of crimes agains humanity. As their
leader, he would be held responsible for the actions of his men.